Down South, college football is king and fall is time to reign

AP file photo by Mike McCarn / Clemson football coach Dabo Swinney
AP file photo by Mike McCarn / Clemson football coach Dabo Swinney

Folks in the South aren't giving up on their beloved fall tradition of college football just yet.

While other leagues have conceded the fall to the COVID-19 pandemic, the Atlantic Coast, Big 12 and Southeastern conferences are holding out hope they can play a shortened season with uncertain national championship prospects.

From Alabama to Oklahoma to South Carolina, a number of states don't have NFL teams, and college football is king. Weddings and other events are planned around game days, and states practically stand still for showdowns like Alabama-Auburn and Oklahoma-Texas.

"It's so deeply rooted here and part of the culture of social life, tailgating and all that," said Charles Reagan Wilson, professor emeritus at the Center for the Study of Southern Culture at the University of Mississippi.

The Pac-12, Big Ten - which with the ACC, Big 12 and SEC form the Power Five - and some lower-profile leagues won't play football this fall because of the pandemic. ACC teams? They are already practicing in preparation for a Sept. 12 start, and the Big 12 and SEC are going ahead, too, with conference openers set for Sept. 26.

Still, powerhouse Alabama and other SEC teams head into Monday's first preseason practices knowing that while football is still on for them right now, it's not guaranteed to stay that way.

"That's the only mood I feel like is going around, is we don't know if we're playing and we really want to play,'" Alabama tailback Najee Harris said Friday.

He then talked about his younger teammates.

"We try to tell them don't go to parties, but, like, it's kind of hard to tell somebody not to go to a party in college," he said. "We understand it, but we're kind of just telling them, 'If you do go to a party, like make sure you guys are overly safe.'"

Clemson coach Dabo Swinney, who led the Tigers to national titles in 2016 and 2018, said "the virus doesn't go away" without football.

"Yes, guys could still get it and I could still get it," Swinney said. "But we all have to make our risk assessments in life. It's always been that way. It's not going to be any different in the spring. ... Our football team has made its decision. Hopefully, people will respect our decision and allow us to play."

Many fans certaintly they are able to because Saturday game days would provide a sense of normalcy. That is true for players, too, many of whom have been involved in football since they were boys. Campus is also seen as a safe haven for some.

"Back where a lot of us are from, it's not good for us to go back home right now during this time," said Louisville quarterback Micale Cunningham, who is from Birmingham, Alabama. "I mean, you can catch the virus like you can catch it here just being out on the street."

Louisville coach Scott Satterfield said he believes the practice routines provide structure as players work toward the goal of Saturday football.

"We have all these protocols, we're testing, we're doing all these things to prevent any spread of this virus," he said. "But if they don't have a purpose, they're 18-to-22-year-olds. I mean, do we think that they're going to sit in their room 24 hours a day? It's not going to happen."

Another pressing question is who will be there to watch. Teams like Alabama haven't announced plans for seating capacity, but athletic director Greg Byrne said it would be significantly reduced. Oklahoma is already planning for seating capacity of just 25%.

Has playing football been politicized? Wilson said he hasn't seen governors politicize the issue but noted that all three leagues planning to play are largely in "red states." President Donald Trump and Sen. Majority Leader Mitch McConnell, both Republicans, have made pleas for college football to be played.

"I hope the ACC and SEC stick with their current plan, which is to have football this fall," McConnell said in a recent radio interview.

Chris Massaro, the athletic director at Middle Tennessee State, said it was important for leagues such as Conference USA, in which his program plays football, "to be in lockstep with these other conferences." C-USA is playing its league schedule, and teams can play up to four nonconference games, too.

"I saw a map earlier that basically stretches across the South of the teams that are playing. ... It's not only conference to conference, it's also statewide philosophies," Massaro said.

To Big Ten and Pac-12 leaders, a football season wasn't worth the risk.

"Other conferences may play," Michigan State athletic director Bill Beekman said. "Certainly their presidents and chancellors and medical staffs and ADs and head coaches may land in a different place than we did, and that's their prerogative. I think we as a Big Ten conference made the decision that we thought was in the best interest of our student-athletes, and there will be challenges that come with it."

Mississippi Gov. Tate Reeves, a Republican, made it clear how important he thinks college football is in his state. He also said conferences that cancel football "are doing it because they're scared of lawsuits and bad press."

"College football is essential," Reeves wrote on Twitter. "What do opponents of football think, these kids will end up in a bubble without it? You can get COVID anywhere. There are forces who want to cancel everything to avoid risk at all societal costs. It's foolish. We have to balance risk & costs."

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